@Shoe There are differences in viewpoint. When I was a kid, one of my friends asked me if my dad hated being a wheelchair. I'd never thought about it, so I asked him. He replied that no, quite the contrary. When he was young, his parents couldn't afford a wheelchair, so he had almost no mobility at all. The wheelchair improved his mobility immensely.
@Shoe My employer is scheduled to cease operation on the 25th of this month, so I've been interviewing a lot. What's truly depressing is the state of recruiting and such. One recruiter especially seems intent on just sending me every job opening imaginable--and a few I wouldn't have imagined.
Their most recent email lists 5 jobs they claim match my profile: 1) "Earn cash taking surveys" 2) Take out service support, 3) Client Service Manager, 4) Customer Service Dispatcher, and 5) Pool Bartender (seasonal part time).
I'm starting to think my profile basically says: "We're about 60% sure he's not a zombie, so at least you don't have to worry about him going berserk and eating people's brains."
@Shoe The coding aspects have been pretty cool--no 20 year old code bases; almost all brand new code. Management...not really so much. Oh well, interviews have been pretty promising though...
Don't get me wrong: management hasn't been all bad either--just a lot more variable.
@Shoe Just very heavy on feminism and other forms of political correctness. Particularly noticeable when you've read about how equal-opportunity every employer is for the 300th time...
I guess I shouldn't complain though. Years ago I went to the holocaust museum in Washington DC. Among other things, they had a display trying to point out that the German anti-Semitic stance wasn't really all that strange at the time. They had a page of job ads from the New York Times, shortly before WW II. Lots of ads read almost like personal ads. "Wanted: pretty blonde girl 20-23 to answer the phone. No Irish, jews, or wops."
At the time, that apparently wasn't seen as particularly racist at all though. Kind of hard to imagine any more.
@Mikhail ...and keep in mind, this wasn't a single isolate ad. Entire pages of this stuff. Simple fact is 1) unemployment was high, and 2) there was no law to prevent it--so business owners were basically free to choose whoever they felt like.
@Mikhail Cray has an office in La Jolla (near where I currently work) but zero current openings there. Only one opening in California at all, and that's for an intern.
@Mikhail Maybe not. I've worked with some really good people at KnuEdge, a fair number of whom have already moved to other jobs, and are now soliciting me to come work with them...
My current dilemma is the old one: do I take a job at a startup that pays kind of poorly now, but includes stock that might be worth a lot soon, or do I opt for more pay now, but little chance of actually getting rich, regardless of how well the company does?
@Mikhail They don't have an office local to me, and with 4 kids in school I'm resistant to moving (I know--a pretty serious handicap in high-tech unless you live in the bay area).
if everything would be fine if the startup went tits up and the stock worth nothing, then sounds like it would be an interesting thing to take the startup job
@Mikhail Well, now that you mention it, yes--I do have a few tens of thousands of options in KnuEdge that almost certainly will never have any value...
Well as Douglas Adams noted, we create our own obstacles. Problem with engineers is that we learn, grow, when we create those obstacles. Fuck rationality.
@Mikhail So do I take a job with Insulet or GigaIO, or possibly a military contractor that would pay even more and wouldn't even allow me to work more than 40 hours/week? That's my question in more concrete terms.
@Mikhail I guess maybe I'm just too old, but I can't remember seeing many goths I found very attractive.
@Mikhail Pump itself has been approved and in use for ~10 years. They have some new things they can't talk to me about much without an NDA that are in approval process.
@JerryCoffin Wow, those two choices are very different. I don't know because I can't do technical diligence on these companies. Companies that have an FDA approved product and customers are really stable, rarely do any work, and often don't have growth opportunities.
@JerryCoffin You're going to show up to work, and if you do anything, they will get pissed off.
@Mikhail Yeah, they just happen to be where two of my former coworkers ended up, and they've both been pushing to recruit me.
@Mikhail Although they can't tell me many details, they've been pretty clear that they are developing something new and (at least somewhat) different. From what they're saying, FDA approval is particularly long and drawn out because it's something nobody's even tried to get approved before (but exactly what it is or how it differs, I'm uncertain).
For devices its pretty easy, but takes a long time. Typically you're team is burning cash during that time, for more than half a decade.Everybody gets paid, and nobody is doing very much.
@Mikhail I dunno--my friend seems to be putting in a fair number of hours, but I'm not sure how much is real work, and how much just required to show up N hours/week. On the other hand, they are hiring, and plan to ~double team size this summer.
Anyway, almost 2:30 now. I really do need to get to bed.
Medicine is a weird discipline ... most of the things medicine can cure, human body is able to do that itself. Most of the things human bodies can not cure - HIV, cancer etc, medicine can not do anything either.
Antibiotics can cure bacteria when the human body can't. HIV can be kept in check with only drugs. Struggling to find modern drugs that were developed for one thing but found a use for something else.
Medical fields are weird because everyone is a lying scum bag, and the tech might be impossible but the market is guaranteed. Contrast with sass where the tech is easy but there is no market.
@TelKitty not without great difficulty, this is how people used to die. Perhaps half of infants didn't reach adult hood.
Hard to say. In the case of an open wound the body will seal of a part. Antibiotics can actually target the bacteria when the active immune system has given up.
Not to mention HIV and PrEP
Anyways modern medicine does a lot of stuff the body can't
yes, modern medicine is successful and useful ... but only as a facilitator - give you a 110 year old person whose body is old and run down, medicine would not be as useful
I'm going to gradually try and convince them to consider trying some open source freely licensed engine instead (since I'm the only one that has managed to even /create/ a C++ project in unreal so far anyway, how much can they really argue?)
@Mikhail Viagra was originally used for dealing with circulatory problems (and is still useful for that as well as ED). Of course, you can make a perfectly good case that this is because ED is a circulatory problem, but most people don't think of it that way.
Is it just me or am I the only person I know that prefers CodeBlocks over VS?
my personal laptop has Windows 10 and I use CB 90% of the time bc I prefer it's minimalist style
besides, when I make programs for my own hobbies or fun they usually don't have a GUI. like developing dll's and rn I'm working on a hand-made library for SSL/TLS
however I have to say I would use VS for anything GUI related bc frankly CB is a pain in the ass in that regard. It has wx for making GUI but I don't like its interface
@nwp at least Casey has a core message that makes sense; understand how what you are programming works and cut through the library cruft when appropriate.
though he is a bit extreme in that. He recently did a stream where he wanted an "ISA" back to the hardware. He actually meant a kernel interface that wasn't so bogged down by decades of backwards compatibility requirements.
in his ideal world every program would have full access to the hardware and alt tab is instead a reboot to program, killing the previous one
I thought it was PDP11 days when people got annoyed that their printouts got screwed up because of multiple programs trying to control the printer and thus deciding that programs may not access the printer and have to instead use a certain printer function that does proper serializing.
But I guess different systems did that at different times.
Some applications, such as scanning programs or hard disk formatters, need to call the SCSI or ATA Managers directly. These applications must take special care when VM is enabled. For example, if such an application was to grab exclusive access to the SCSI bus and then take a page fault, VM would be unable to swap in the new page, making the page fault fatal.
^ legacy compatibility at its finest, although I can understand Apple in the sense that they couldn't afford to loose their eco system
Read the intro, scroll through 5 pages explaining a concept that everybody should already know. Find maybe 1 or 2 paragraphs of actual content. Then 3 more pages of benchmarks. A 1 page conclusion saying how they didn't really accomplish anything. And then 4 pages of citations.
Oh and I forgot: 3 or 4 pages trying to distinguish themselves from a dozen other papers doing the same thing. All of which are used to pad the citations section.